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View Poll Results: Could the Kindle spark book piracy? | |||
Yes, book piracy will get a boost thanks to successful Kindle sales |
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26 | 20.16% |
On the contrary, since it's now even easier and cheaper to purchase e-books |
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46 | 35.66% |
No, there won't be any change. |
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57 | 44.19% |
Voters: 129. You may not vote on this poll |
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#121 |
Groupie
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Karma: 1107
Join Date: Oct 2007
Device: Infinite Kindles, Occasional Sony's
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I just don't get it, really. I don't buy books for the purpose of having many piles of bound paper bricks all over my house. I buy the content. The paper is merely a delivery mechanism.
Mr Jordan is, I think, going to have a difficult time convincing the iPod generation that the physical format of purchased content is any more meaningful than the box my iPod came in. I unpacked my iPod and tossed the box in my recycle bin. We're approaching a time when people will be able to recycle those piles of books (my husband will be so happy, he keeps tripping over the durn things) after transforming the content into something that can be stored on a hard drive and tossed in a drawer. In that context, it is difficult for me to understand the need to repurchase the content I've already paid for just because I can't easily get it out of the 'box' it came in. |
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#122 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 5171130
Join Date: Jan 2006
Device: none
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People have a hard time accepting speed limits, too. However, when car accidents and deaths result, people decide to accept police action, ie, ticketing speeders, in the name of public safety. People also have a hard time accepting having to pay for something they want. But when they realize that anarchy helps society not a bit, they accept the fact that things should be paid for, for the sake of an ethical society. You can keep arguing for free stuff and anarchy all you want, but the fact is that the rest of society has already voted you down. Get used to paying for stuff. |
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#123 | ||
Resident Curmudgeon
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Karma: 146391129
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
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#124 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Karma: 146391129
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
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#125 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 7185064
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Linköpng, Sweden
Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW
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#126 | |
Groupie
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Karma: 1107
Join Date: Oct 2007
Device: Infinite Kindles, Occasional Sony's
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Quote:
How do you figure that? As near as I can tell, they are identical. Using the iPod analogy again, I can play my CDs without having to touch them, too. The thing I 'touch' when I read a physical book is paper, nothing more than a delivery mechanism for the content. If that weren't true, I would not have to buy more than one book, ever. I'd have a book and not need any more, because they'd all be the same. (and oh, what a happy hubby I would have...). When I buy a book, I am not buying the paper and ink, I am buying a license to read and enjoy the content. I seems to me that authors would have a lot more objections to things like public libraries, which share the content by lending out the physical container. You don't get any money from the additional readership. At least I am buying my books, every one of them. If I want to download the content so I can discard the container (which takes up a lot of space if you have enough of them), I do not see how that is in any way unfair to the author. Mind you, I say I would discard (recycle, actually) the books, not sell them. I will readily agree that if I sold the book (or even gave it away), it would be wrong for me to hang onto an electronic copy of the content. Last edited by mdibella; 12-09-2007 at 02:02 PM. |
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#127 |
Enthusiast
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Karma: 10
Join Date: May 2006
Location: UK, Cambridge
Device: Kindle 2 / Sony PRS-505&500 / ipod touch 2nd gen
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Yes but....
I voted 'yes'. My reasoning...
I see it like this. Increase the number of e-reader devices and you will increase the total number of pirated ebook downloads. However, this is in absolute numbers only! In my opinion the kindle will drastically decrease the proportion of pirated ebooks downloaded vs legal downloads. As a whole the publishing industry and authors will benefit greatly from devices such as the kindle. Well, providing they allow customers based outside of the US to give them their money. ![]() |
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#128 | |||
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 5171130
Join Date: Jan 2006
Device: none
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Again, my opinion is that an e-book is just as substantial as a printed book. It is an instance of a concept, as a paperback is an instance, a hardback is an instance, a stone tablet is an instance, and a movie is an instance. You should pay for each instance. The amount of trouble it took (or did not take) to create that instance is immaterial to the consumer. You are free to debate or accept the price, but ultimately it is the creator that sets the price. Your legal, moral and ethical choice is limited to buying it or not. Taking it for free because it's easy is not a moral or ethical argument. But it is a legal argument, if your country (like Sweden) says you can. In the U.S., the law says you can't. |
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#129 |
Sir Penguin of Edinburgh
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Karma: 23555235
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: DC Metro area
Device: Shake a stick plus 1
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I have a hypothetical situation for you, Steve. Let's say I bought an ebook from you. I download it, and copy it to my ebook reader.
I now have two copies, one on my PC and the other on the reader. Should I pay you for the second copy? Why can't the same principle apply for a pbook and an ebook? If the content has been paid for, why does the consumer have to buy it a second time? The problem, as I see it, is that CDs and MP3s have changed how some people look at electronic content. A CD is little different from a collection of MP3s. If someone owns the one, they will not pay for the second because they can get it so easily. This viewpoint has bled into the ebook market. |
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#130 | |
Addict
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Karma: 334908
Join Date: Oct 2006
Device: multiple
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#131 | |
Addict
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Karma: 334908
Join Date: Oct 2006
Device: multiple
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I own alot of ebooks bought at ereader. I re-read alot of them over time. I absolutely refuse to EVER buy one of these books in a different e-format. IMHO, we will see some sanity in the ebook market coming from overseas at first. Rumour is that CHina is looking to replace paper texts with etexts. The textbook market is where I see this sanity emerging. Ebooks can be great, they can have alot of beneficial effects. But if the publishers cling to their old model, and expect us to pay almost the same price for an ebook as a pbook, while at the same time depriving us our rights (right to resell, etc.), then there won't be an ebook market of consequence. Consumers, as an entity, aren't this stupid. Ipod's success? Well, if you buy a music cd, you can convert it to Ipod or anything else you want, again and again. You can make a backup of the cd on hard drive so you have a good copy if your cd is scratched. You pay for content one time, and can use it on different devices that you own. For $15 or $20 for a cd, that's fair. And here is what some book publishers tell us- you spend $24 for my hardcover edition, you must spend $20 for an electronic version ofr your palmpilot. And if you buy a kindle, baby, shell out more cash to read on that. And if the Kindle disappears ever, and you still want to read the book you have already purchased, shell out more cash for a new format. Given that the population that regularly buys books is a much smaller one than that which regularly buys music, well, this doesn't seem to be a strategy that will lead to market success. |
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#132 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 5171130
Join Date: Jan 2006
Device: none
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It's clear to me that many of you simply consider an e-book (and, by extention, an MP3) to be essentially worthless, because it's not on paper (or disc), and therefore, it should be free for all. You also don't consider an e-book (or MP3) to be the equal of a printed book or CD, despite repeatedly saying that they are "the same" in content. Obviously, I don't consider that a practical, sensible, logical or ethical argument, and I'd like to point out that while you all are trying to convince me that I am wrong, you have made little headway in convincing me that you are right. So: Explain to me how something that is "essentially content," and is considered worth something in one format, is worth nothing in an electronic format. Explain to me why the production cost of a piece of content dictates the worth of that content, and how it impacts the compensation due to the creator. Explain why it is a consumer's business what a creator pays to produce something. Explain why it is okay for someone who is not connected to a creator, and does not know the creator's wishes, to reproduce that creator's work and resell it or give it away. Explain why it is okay for someone who does not like a creator to reproduce that creator's work and resell it or give it away to spite them. Explain why a creator should not have any say in how their creation is produced, or what it costs. And finally, explain how it is right to take something for free, because you are not satisfied with something's cost or format. |
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#133 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 67827
Join Date: Jan 2005
Device: PocketBook Era
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For literally hundreds of years, customers have been able to pay and own a copy of some content. We pay for a book and we own that book - forever - and can read that book again and again - forever. The content owners (not necessarily authors) have never liked this. They do not want consumers to ever own a copy. They want consumers to pay every time they want to enjoy the content. They only want consumers to rent content. |
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#134 |
Banned
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Karma: 15348
Join Date: Jun 2007
Device: mine
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hmmm...to me this is a simply issue...it is fine to have a personal backup of any electronic content one has licensed. But there is no reason someone should be allowed an electronic copy of a book simply because one has the hard-copy on a shelf. Electronic copies are just a different edition of a book, as in hardback vs. paperback. But making a scanned copy of a hard-copy book as a personal backup might seem be fine to most of us...but really since one is changing the delivery system of the content, the author & parasites...errr, I mean...publishers, should have a valid complaint. But a photocopy as a backup should be fine, but likely much more expensive then just buying a new copy if ours is destroyed.
I bet if authors retained the e-rights to their works then made the content directly available at a reasonable price most of us would be happy to pay for the e-version even if we own the hard copy of our favs. One problem is there is so much content with no current e-versions or even the hope of e-versions anytime in the near future. For me personally that is a problem as I can no longer hold books (or anything else) in my hands for more then a few moments at a time...hence I am a HUGE fan of the ebook options and increasing the selection of both devices and content... We should all SUPPORT the authors efforts to get ebook versions out there for all of their works...and also be compensated for that edition of their works. Beyond that all I really read here are circular arguments. |
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#135 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 7185064
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Linköpng, Sweden
Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW
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The laws i am referring to are the same laws that makes it legal to copy a music CD and give it to friends and family. And you cannot say that you have thousands of friends and use that law. |
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